Newspapers / Marion Record (Marion, N.C.) / Aug. 8, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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Freeh butter Ln been transporte! from Australia to England and sold at a profit for twenty-tire cents a pound. The freight amounts to two cents a pound. Tho next Australian experi ment will be with youltur. Baltimore and Ohio officials are more than patisfled with th working of its 'l"trie motors u-edto h:ml train. through the Kiltl- moretunii"!. Some of thvm arc preii"iins ( that within a few year motor.- will stir-plant locomotivt f for haulim all trains Supreme Court Decision!. ' Since Chaa, O. Tyner began the manufac frure of Tyner's Dr9ppia Remedy, many 5eople have inquired as to its efficacy. Chief ugtice Bleckley, of tieorjjia. has tnd It for Indigestion and dyHpepsia, and gives this as tils decision : , "Atlanta, Ga March 11. lc)t.Cha-. O. Tyner, Atlanta, Oa.: I have n-ed. and am now usintr, Tyner's rytepsia Itemed v. It Is a mental as well a3 a phynicnl elixir. it n Its aid and a pair of upectacles I can frequent ly ate the law intpite of uu"iitaMe r.r two ranch diet. Liifan K. Bleckley." ThU is a fcpltndid declMon aud people are 'profiting by it. Nat Ice. I want every man and woman In the Ignited fctat Interested In the Oplam and N haky babiti to have one of my Uioks on these dls inin. AddresgB. M. Woolley. Atlanta, Ga.. Box 3cl. and one will be i-ent you free. Do Yea Knew It Caatef Ind'gestloD: Do yoa know when yon ! 1t? Do you know it cacse an! cure? Ak j our drugglit for Iilpaas TabOiea. One firea rrllef. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of l'int,") hy l'i (Jure for f'onM'im.ptlon. Lorm LiMMMiN, Jicthany, Mo., Jan. X, 194. Walking Wcnld Often be a fleaaar wore it not for corns. Theee peeta are removed with Hinderrorna. lc at druggists. Mr. Winilow's Soothln? Syrup for children teethinif, foftens t he (rums, reduce inflamma tion, allav pain, rures wind rolir. Slic. a bottle. If afllirted with oreeye ti.c Dr. I-aac Thomp f.nV Kye water. Iini'i-H sdl at -V; perbottle I Can't Sleep. Is tho complaint of many at thia season. Th reason Is found in tho fact that the nerve arc weak and tho body in a fever ish and unhealthy condition. Tho nerves tony l restored by Hood' a Harsaparllla, which feeds them upon pure blood, and this medicine will nlno create an appetite and tono np I Ik; Hyntem, and thus jdvo eweet rern'diini- nli and vif-orous health. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tho .iily Into blood purifier prominently in tho pulIi; eye today. $1; bIi for t5. Hood's Pills uUrnZztLy The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered In ono or our common past urn wecd-j a remedy tliat cures every kind of Humor, from tho worst Scrofula 'own to a common pimple. Ho lum trie 1 it in over eleven hundred canes, and never failed except in twocases (both thunder humor). Ho has now In his possession over two hundred certifi cates of iu value, ail within twenty miles of Iiis?ii. Sen. I postal card for book. A l( neilt Is always experienced from the flt' t bottle, and .i ptrfeet c. ire is warranted when the rit;ht ipiantity is taken. Win n the Itins art affected it causes plio.tin pains, like needles passing through them; tho name with tho Liver ft r.i'.yls. This is cause 1 by tho ducts Iwin steppe I. an I always disappears in a week after taking it. I lead the labeL II the nt,,.,,..;, j f,,i ,,r bilious it will e.v -e 'ipi-a'tiish feelings at llrst. N" i !i i!i:;e of diet ever necessary. Eat tie- l-i. .t you can c-t. and enough of it. I ;.-, ,ti t :i! 'b s; i: f ul in water at bod- li.'ll-. .V'l 1 by iiii liniir-isU. r-rj : vi L'htS IrM'.t ALL USr. (i Drt I'.h hviuji. Twu-s tend. Cue LJ t iliMiti. i-..h1 Vv c.riii'irid'n t1 60UTIIERN KAIWAY CO. (EASTERN HYSTEU.) Caitara Tin. at Celambin and Pti Worth Korthbound. April il. 1H95. Lr. JaiU!oi)viiia , t. Savanna1! Ar. coiuuiuia Lt Charleston. . .. Ar Colombia. No 30 Dally No lO No 39 Daily Dally C 4 J r 7 00 a lU2l 10.14 nl 5 30 p 11 10 p Lv Augusta . . . " (tranltevillo " Trenton Johnstons tr Columbia. .. Columbia .. " Wtnnsboro . " Chestrr M Hock Hill . .. Ar Charlotte. . . " Danville. Kfchmond. ... 10 80 U.IS 11 41 ii( 2 J0 I 50 4 49 6 35 SOS 7 00 11 40 P 140 a 1 XX m a, J.45 p 3 no a 4 49 a i 3 a mm i 7.oo a IN 5 63 a 6 10 p i 7 20 D SO p lit OJat 11.43 p I) p 4 40 p oo a 0i m. M'ashlitoc I " ltaltlniore rhilaiio phla .. I New York I SS p 9.31 p II n it 'IK . a w a son a 83 al 6 23 a!l2 53 B 10 V9 a oathbound. No 35 No 0 No 31 Dally Dally pally liV.New York " I'hilaJelphla.. naltiinorc .. Lv.V.'ashington .. 12 inntju lSnti 4 70 p T.20 m 7 20 a 0 M p 9 42 a' 9 41 a t.SQ b 11.01 a 11.01 a'l0.43 9 Lv. Richmond . L T.Dan v11 v Chr'oT le ' KocU Hill " thesfr " winnbro ... tr. Columbia..... r.ColumbU .... " Johnstons .. . Trenton " GranlteTllle... Ar. Augusta 1C9 W 100 p' 12 05 a io p) io pi t s a 11.05 p 11.08 ji 9 35 a II M p 11.51 p. 10.7 is 12.nt 12i5nt 1 11 td aw a 1.'UI,1.14 1.14 a 11.54 a 2 ro 1.00 p 1 45 a 4 30 a S2 a 3.24 p 1 42 p 4 05 p 4 33 p 6 4S a 7. IS al 8 .00 a LT.ColumMa . ar Charleston 4 a! 11.30 aj 4C0 p 40 p LT.Columbia Ar.Savannah ' Jaiks.inviile 1 30 i f. At: , 12 10 p I A 1A k -0 1 LEtriSO CAR SERVICE. Nos. 57 an t 3$, Washington and 8outh wotern Limited, composed of Tnllman Caret mlufmum Tubman rate f 2.00; no extra fare. Throu'i Sleeping Cars between New York Bi. t New Orleans. New York and Memphis, Kew.York and Tampa and W'ashlacton, Ashe ville an i !Iot Springs, Also carries first -cIoas f o. h between Washineton and JaekonviHe, DiiitLV!; Car between Greensboro and Mont gomery. :." 33 nnd 3fi, United States Fa.t Mail, rullman Meepinc Cars Ntweon New York, Atl inta and Montsromery, and New York and Jacksonville. Also lias Sleeping Carbetweeu Charlotte aud Augusta. N). 12. Sleeping Car Greensboro to IU1 f iirli. No. S5, Sleeping Car Raleigh to Oreena boro. Through tickets on sale at principal stations to all points. For niU'-s or information ap plv t nnv aent of tlu Company. N. J. O JiniLN. Superintendent First Di vb.' iti, Danville, a, W. U. KYDEK, Superintendent Second Dl rNion. Charlotte, N. C. W. II. GHEEN, General Superintendent, Washington, D. C. V. A. JKJRK, General Passenger AretU Vashiastoi). P. C. r-i FAILS. Fl PI "MAN OVERBOARD." UK. TAL MAGE'S THEME SUNDAY. An Eloquent Sermon on Jonah AVitb ll4 Lessons for Sleepy Christians. i Teit: "So the shipmarter came to him and paid unto him: 'What meanest thou, O (deeper' Arise, call upon thy God, it so b that God will think uponus, that we perish not.' "Jonah i., f, God told Jonah to eo to Nineveh on an nn T'lwant errand. H would not tro. He thought Io iret away fr m his duty bv putting to e. With pack under hi arm I find him on his way to Joppa. a Pvaport. He gos down among th-? dilpping and ears to th' in"n lyin around on the dock. Which of thef v.scU sails to-lay?' The sailors an swer. ''Y(.nd'r is a r goin to Tarshish. I thi'ik if von hurry you may get on board her."' J. -nib s'epa on loar 1 th' r ouh craft, ask-i how inn:h tli fare is. and rsvs it. An'h.r is wigh J. si Us are hoisted, an I the rigt'inv b"sr ins to rattl in the strong breeze of the M"d:terranan. Joppa is an exposed liario. an 1 it dos n'-t take long for the ves sel to fet (.si the broa l sa. The sailors like what they call a ".-t anking breez,' and the plunge ,f jh" vevsej fnm the crest of a tall wave is ex'nilarating to those at home on tho deep. iJut th strong br(ez becomes a gale, the gale a hurricane. The affrighted passen gers a.-k th -i captain if he ever saw anything like this bfor". "Oh. yep." he says. "Tiiis is nothing." .Mariri'-rs are slow to a Initdatiger to lands men. Ii.it arter awhile crash g.':s the mast, and the V3s d pitches s-i far ".I'lca-n's en 1" there is a b ar shi will not h" righted. Th eap'ain answers few q-pst ions, an 1 orders jthe throwing out of boxes anl bundle and of ho much of the cargo a.s they can get at. The captain at last confesses there Is but lit tle hop ami tells th passnxT that they r a 1 letter goto f raying. It is seldom that a se.t captain is an atheist. II knows that there is a Go I. for he has seen Him at every i-oiut of latitude bet ween Handy Hook and Q-fonstown. Captain Mooily, commanding the Ciiia of the Cunard line, at Sun lay sr-vici- led the music and sang like a Methodist. The captain of this Mediterranean craft, havinx set th" passengers to praying, goes a round examining the vessel at every roint. He descends into the cabin to see whetherin the strong wrestling of the waves the vessel had sprung aleak, and In finds Jonah asleep. Jonah had bad a wearisome tramp and had spent many sleepless nights about questions of ditiy. an I h is so sound asleep that all the thunder of the storm and the screaming of the passengers does not disturb him. The captain lays hold of him and begins to shako him out of his unconsciousness with tho ,.rv. "Hon'i yon sen that we nr all going to the bottom? Wake up and go to praying if vou have any God to go to. What mean est thou. O sleeper? Arise, call upon thy God, If so be that God will think upon us, that we perish not." The rest of the story I will not r-heirs". for you know it well. To appease the sea, they threw Jonah over board. Learn that the devil takes a man's money and then sets him down in a poor landing place. The l',ibe says he paid his fare to Tarshi-h. I'.ut see him get out. The sailors bring him to the side of the ship, lift him over the guards and let him drop with a loud splash into the waves. He paid his fare all the v.-ay to Tarshisb, but did not get the worth of his money. Neither does any one s ho turns his back on his duty and does that which is not right. There is n young man who during the past year has spent a large part of hia salary in carousal. What has he gained by it? A soiled reputation, a half starved purse, a dissipated look, a petulant temper, n dis turbed conscience. The manacles of one or two bad habits that are pressing tighter and tighter will keep on until they wear Io the bone. You paid your fare to Tarshish. but you have boon set down in the midst of a sea of disquietude an l perplexity. One hundred dollars forSunday horsohire. One hundred dollars for wine suppers. One hundred dollars for cigars. One hundred dollars for frolics that shall be nameless. Making four hundred dollars for his dam nation! Instead of being iu Tarshish now he is in the middl" of the Mediterranean. Ib-re is a literary man tired of the faith of his father who resolves to launch out into what is called freethinking. He buys Theo dore Parker's works for 12. Kenan's "Life of Christ" for 1. 50, Andrew Jaekson Davis's works for -2 Goes to hear infidels talk at the clubs and to se spiritualis-n at the ta'de rapping. Talks glibly of David, the psalm ist, its mi old libertin", of Taul as a wild en thusiast and of Christ asn decent kind of a man, a little weak iu some respects, but a' mopt as good as himself. Talks smilingly of Sunday as a good day to put a little extra blacking on one's boots and of Christians as, for the mo.-t part, hypocrites of eternity as "the great to be." "the everlasting now" o.- "the infinite what is it." Some day he gets his feet very wet and lln Is htms lf that night chilly; the nt morning has a hot month nn 1 is headachy; sends word over to the srore that he will not bo there to-dav; bathes his feet: hasmutarl placers; calls the doctor. The medical mau says aside, "This is going to ba bad case of congestion of the lung-." Voice fail--. Children must be kept down stairs or sect to the neighbors to k' ; tho houv? qir-f. Yo'i say, "Sen1' .ir the minister." Hut no. lb does nof believ.i in minis! ts. You say, "Head th- Ilibh t . him." No; he '.iies not believe in the r.id A law yer comes in. and sitting by his b-lsido writes a d"umnnt that be.'ins 'Jo tin name of God. amen. I, l-.ein oi'soun I mind, do make this my lat will it'll rnent. ' It is certain wlvre the s:" man's bolyw.ll U Iu 1m Ihnn n -rrnk. It is quite cejt'loi Who wilt get his propertv. Hut what will become of his soul.'' It will go into "the great to be," or. "the everlasting now," or "the infinite what is it." His s.oil is in deep w.iters, andthe wind is "blowing great guns," Ienth cries. "Overboard with the un believer'" A splash. H goes to tin bot tom. II raid for his ticket to Tarshish when h" bought th intldel h- k. H landed in perdition. Every farthing you spend in sin s.ii.n will swindle you out f. H promises y ei shall have thirty per cent, or a great dividend. He lies. Ho will sink all the capital. You may pay full far to some sinful suc '-'s?, but you will never get to Tarshish. Learn how souudly m u will slcp in th? midst of danger. The worst sinner on ship yard, considering the light he ha I, w-.s Jonah. He was a member of th- church, while they were heathen. Tiio sailor. wer engaged in their lawful calling, following the sea. The merchants on board. I sup iose, were going down tnTi:rshih t halter, but Jonah, notwithstanding his Christian profession, was flying from duty, lb was sound asleep in the cabin. Ho has bc:m motionless for hours his arms and fe-n in the same posture as when he lay down his breast heaving with deep respiration. Oh. how could he sleep? What if th ship stru?k a rock? What if it sprang aleak? What if the clumsy oriental crift should capsize? What would become of Jmh? So men sleep soundly u.w amid perils lnllnite. In almost every place, 1 suppos-, the Mediterranean might be sounded, but no line is l.viig enough fathom the i,r foun I b-niith everv impenitent man. Plunging a thousand fathoms down, you cannot touch bottom. Eternity Umeath I him. before him. around him! K cks close by an 1 whirlpool- anl h t breathe! Lvanters. Yet sounl a-deep! We try to wake him up. but fail. The great surges of w irn'.n; hreV over the hurricane deck, the g .ngof warning sviuls through th- cabin, th lH rings. "Awake!" cry a h.in ire ! vi .. Y-t s iu I aslc--. ia thca:n. In th v..v 1773 the ,.a;t ii:i -' a Gri l.vi 1 whiling vi'l f..in I hims!f a nigh siirrnnlMtv i'-'.rg- ait "lav t " unt'd mornmg. er-:iiiT evrv m tman' to h- oun t to P:e. ... t:, th-morntnT h o-- at of an 1 s;T a hio nav bv II h il-1 i. No answer. Getting int a boit with sm- of the crew, h" uhl ut for th- '"vneri -me craft. Getting neir bv. h- aw thr vjhthe porth de a man at a stan 1. a f 'Tigh keeping a logb.iV. Uhvi-t him. 'wiswr. H went ti boar I th- v.l fnd fun 1 th man sitting at the log'oV, fr-TMi 1 1 death. Th- log'.ok w da!i !". howinj that th- vesel hal be wan dering for thirteen years among thie. Th- snilors were foun I frozen amo'i the I'H'limo 'ks atll (.titers ill tlif .'.in Po- tlnrte.'ii vears this ship ha 1 b-;n earrving its blir 1 Ml of Corns . S from t'lis go;vd craft to-lav I deerv v vu.-rs foretenptv. I c-v: "iioah5v! S'vr. n'uiv!" N.i atmvr. Thv ,1 at a'fi'i", ysl aa l gri'iul ! tli i -?') .s of in, h llstin; no sail for h?iveu. I gj . b-jtrl. I flnl all asleep. It is a Iroza sl-je . Oh. tnaT tit L.ori Je-w would come anoarJ and lav hold of the wheel and rter the era't dowu into the wra eu'f stram of His mftrcy! Awak". thou that steepest! Arise from" the dead, and Christ shall giv the? life Again, notice thii mn ar arouvtl hrth mot unexpeete 1 means. 1 Jonah hi 1 been toll one year before that a heathea set eaotaln would evor awa'cen bim to a sen-n of danger, he would have scofe 1 at the i lea. but here it is don. So now men in strange! ways are a-ouel from spiritual stupor. A profane man i brought to conviction by the shocking blasphemy of a comrale. A man aMetidinu church and hearin? a sermon from the text. "The o.t knoweth his owner." ef., goes home impressed, but. crossing his birn yard. an ot come up and licks his hvi 1. an I he says: "There it is now. 'The nt kn ir -th his owner and the ass his master' cr.b. t't I do not know Go '.' The eare:s re-nark of a teamer has tel a man to t bought fn' n nn 1 h".i .'. "The ctii'.d's r-oiari: "Fa'li-r. th-v h ive r.-avrs a': uo'-'e's hous. Whydon't w!iiv'!hi"n:" has brought sal ra tion to th- lwlln. Hr strangest ways and in tha mot unet re.'te1 manner men are a waVeu"'. Thegr.r denerofth' 'ooutss of Huntingdon wa con victe J of soi by hearing th" countess on. the or.r.osiie Hide of the wa'l talkabo it J 's'iJ. John Har !.-'.- was aroused bv a dream, in wh;c!i h" saw the lat lav. an 1 the judge sH tin r. ho I he-tr 1 l-.-s own rw cTt!,l with terrible emrihasie. 'John Hirb'-aV. cimeto judgment'"' Tlve Lord his a toons'" I way of wakinir up J n'!1'. Would tha the rr.es sen jers of jncpcv might now flnl th-ir wiv .down into the side of t!; ship, anl tha 'nnv wh are iiiicons.'ioaslv rocking in toe awhil tcmoe.t of th"ir sia might hear th ? warning: "What meane-t Uiou.O sleeper? Arise and call upon thy Go '!" Asain: L"aru that a man mav wak up too late. If, instead of sleeping. Jonah had ben on bis knees confessing his sins from the time be went on board the craft. I think that Go I would have save 1 him from hiug thrown overboard. I'.ut be wke no too late. The tempest is in full blast, and th" sea, in convulsion, is lashing itself, and nothing will stop it now but the overthrow of Jonah. S men sometimes wake up too late. The last hour has come. The man has uo more idea of dying than I have of dropping down thi; moment. The ringing is all white with the foam of death. How chill the night is: "I must die," he savs, "yet not ready. I must push out upon this awful S"B. but have nothing with which to pay mv fare. The white caps! The darkness! The hurricane! How long have I been sleep ing? Whole davs and months and years. I am quite awak" now. I se everythinT. but it is too lat"." Itivlsible hands take him up II struggles to get loos 2. In v.vu. They bring his soul to th verge. They b-t it down over the side. The winds howl. The sea opens its frothing jaws to swallow. He has gone forcwr. An I while the canvas cracked, and the yards rattled . and the ropes thumped, the sea took up the funeral dirge, playing with opeu diapason of midnight storm, "'Because I have called, and ye re fusej. I have stretched out My hand, and no man regarded, but ye have set at naught all My coiinsl and would none of my reproof, I also will laugh at your calamity, I will mock when your fear cometh." Now, lest any of you should make this mistake, I address you in the words of the Mediterranean sea captain: "What mean est thou, O, sleeper? Arise, call upou thy God, if so be that God will think upon us, that we perish no;." If you have a Go 1, you hud better call upon Him. Po you say. "I have no God?" Then you had better call upon your father's God. When your father was in trouble, whom did he fly to? You heard him in his old days tell about some terrible exposure in a snowstorm, or at sea, or in battle, or among midnight garroters, and how he escaped. Perhaps twenty years before you were born your fathor made sweet acquaintance with Gor.. There in something In tho wo ;n pages of the Bible he used to read which mr.kes you think your father had a God. In; th 3 old religious books lying around tha house, here are passages marked with a lead pencil passages that make you think your father was not a godless man, but that,1 on that dark day when he lay in tha back, room dyiug he was ready all ready. Burj ferhaps your father was a bad man prayer ess and a blasphemer and you never think, of him now without a shudder. He wor shiped the world or his own appetites. Do not then, I beg of you, call upon your fath er s God. but call on your mother s God. I think she was good. Y'ou remember when your father came home drunk late on a cold night, how patient your mother was. Y'ou often heard her pray. She used to sit by the hour meditating as though she wera thinking of some good, warm place, where it never gets cold, and where the bread does not fail, and staggering steps never come. You remember her now ns she sat in cap and spectacles reading her Bible Sunday after noon. What good advice she used to give you! - How black and terrible the hole in the ground looked to you when with two ropes they let her down to rest in the graveyard! Ah, I think from your look that I am on the right track. Awake, O sleeper, and call upon thy mother's God. But perhais both your father and mother were depraved. Terhaps your cradle was rocked by sin and shame, and it is a wonder that from such a starting vou have come to respectability. Then don't call upon tho God of either of your parents I beg of vou. I But you have children. You know God kindled those bright eyes and rounded thoso healthy limbs and set beating within their breast an Immortality. Perhaps in the be lief that somehow it would ba for th ;bst you have taught them to say an evening prayer, and when they kneel beside you an t fold their little hands and look up, tivit faces all innocenco and love, you know t h i there la a Qotl somewhere about in tip room. I think I am on the right track at last Awake, O sleeper, an I call upon the God of thy children! May He set these little ones to puding at thy heart until they charm thee to the same G t whom to-night they will say their little prayers. lb.it. alas, alas, some of these men and wo mea an unmoved by the fact that their father ha 1 a Go 1. that their mother had a Go 1. an 1 thir children have a God, but they have no G 1. All the divine gixidne.ss. for nothing. AH warning for nothing. They are s un 1 asleep in the side of the ship, though th" se aud sky are in mi l wrestle. Many years ago a mau. leaving 'his family in Massa-husetts. sailed from Boston to China to tr.i la there. Oa the coast of Cnina iu th" midst of a night of storm hniaie shi;-vrek. Th- a lventurer was wash-1 uj on the b?a h senseless all his money gone. H-hil to heg iu the streets of Canton to ke p from starving. For two ye;irs there wis no communication between himU and family. They supposed him dead. He knew not but that his family were dea l. He hal g )n' out as a captaiu. He was too prou 1 to cm la?k as a private sailor. But after'a Willi ho choke I down his pride and sailol for Boston. Arriving there he took au evening train for th center of the State, where he ha 1 left his family. Taking the stage from the depot an I ri ling a s'ore of miles, he got horn". H" stvsth if, g oing up in front of the cot tar in th brijht moonlight, the pla?e look 1 1 him like heaven. He rapped on the win low. an 1 the affrighted servant let bit in IJ the n"m b?a wife an 1 chil I were sleeping. H di 1 not dare to wake then for fear of thesh o'k. B mi ling over t kiss hi child's c'le-k, a tesr fell upon the wife's fa--, anlsh wak-nel, and hs sail: "Miry!" and she knwhis voice, and ther was an inlescribable scene of welcome and joy and thanksgiving tc God. To- lay I know that many of you are sea tossed an 1 driven by sin in a wors storm than that which cam- d own ou the eoat of Chins, an 1 yet I pray G 1 that you may, like th sailor, live to g-t horn.-. In the house of many mansions vour friends are waiting to meet you. Thay are wondering why vou do not c ome. E"ape 1 from the shipwrecks of earth, miy yo-t at lat g in! It will be a bright night-a ve-y bright night as you j.ut your thumb on th latch of that door. Oue in yon will flnl th? old family fa-s sW(.ter than wh'ii voi lat saw them, an 1 thre it will b foun 1 that He who was your fathers Go 1, anl your mother's God, an 1 your chil irca'a Go J is y our own most blesse.l R leemer. to whom be glory and dominion throughout ali ages, world with out en L Amen. Monthly Treasury Statement. Tae monthly Treasury statement of th public debt shows a total debt on July SLst, cash in the Tre.aury, to have l.een t-4f..!Os.r05. an increase for the month of f-3.ioo.ftH. This increase is due to the de livery to the London syndicate during Uj month of 131.157.700 la 4 oerc&t. bond. " IttLL ARP'S LETTER. HE IS WORRIED OVER MANY AGITATED QUESTIONS. Wcmen of Ftfty and Over 200 Pounds Should Shun the BUto. It takes a long lima for big things to settle down so that we may get the trn'h and the fact.. 1 was rnmina'ing abont this ineonn( o tion with the preat battle of Mtnacsas that was tons-lit thirty-four yers ago last Sunday. This is one time tint the day of the w. ek sn l the ('ay of the month correspond d with the mn -verearr of that battle. ThiiU-'our years have ptft-e,i ana tins generation ia just i eginiun c io understand what the war was about. Northern b stor es have been so partial and one ei-ted thi.! the young folks have I n snrpnd and i astonished that onr people fuigl.t o hard and ' sib n-z with so little lo fiuht for. But the truth i gradually dawning upon the nVioi. So'i'bem t.istoika have ben wri -ten and in'ro duced into southern schools and ou- c'nldreu are tonvng our defenders. I see that Mrs Susan Pen II-ton Lee. the gifted daughter f Geti rl rndlern, has written ahiotoiyof the United Stat n an I has without res rve tol l the story of I lie late civil war, and the Uni ed Con federate Veterans, in ih'ir preat met-t.og at Illusion, have as f-arlessly indoised it. In a feivcais more the couth Twill bo viodicatid, but it lakes a hng time. Eighty years have pa nod cince Na o!eon figure I in En rope, and f v n now li!K' rmis differ widely alont events and motives coiieei ning him. Marslml Ney was shot m 181 r he dud iu North Caioilna in IS1", nobody knows which. I'or severn 1 -ears we have leen waiting f r he truth rbont tho Hawaiian islands, but it h is not yet b-en wril'cn fn m a non-parti an standpoint. Conseivative peope don't know wbot to believ. 'Ihe mission-ires used to tell us that the Sandwich i-laiidciri were cannibals, fifty ye ais ag , but had all become Chri-tians mil had schiw .'s and churches like we have. Later sccountssay that pohticol Fchen:er and iinptincpled scoundrels from e.ur c:itry have I hindered that unhappy land and r dnced t!ie-sc native to beggars and subjection. And now we read tint another set ate arming ve-s-b-Ih to drive t lie first set out under pretense oT helping the i ntivcs. I wonder what aie tin farts in the case? And what alout Cuba? Who know-? The prt va lifg idea is that Spun is a tyran and has i ot those Cubans by the thro it and they want to govern i lit ui.-elve and ict up a rcpiilican t'oi m of government 1 ke ours. Lut a knowing man, who has been there, to d me that tbos- Cubans were mostly negroes ( f the mos. de gmded kind and Wtie not fit to gcvera thm-t-elvteaid i ll this iiimpus was I eing rabel by a lew filil usti ring Anifriemie, vln want, to capture the island and d.vide out the ofiic;( s and get rich off the sugar p'Hn'a tions that the Spannirds art cultivating. Tncre was a big frss raised and lots of sympathy ex temle i aliont an editor whom the Spani r ls had confined in Moro cat!c. but Homer Reed says he found out the o In r dav that the editor was a coa -black coon who had been v ry scan dalous in bis paper. And bo the quest'on conies up, "is Cu a worth helping?" Iavid wrote. ''I said in mine haste all men are liars," and the old Scot h pn-arber too l that for his text and remarked: "Ah, Iav,d, David, if ye had lived till now o might hae said it at your le sure, me ifim. Aro we a nation of liarr? Read the papers and say ! Who knows wh a' t believe? While I was in Florida ihe other clar I riid from the New York Recorder an awful tccnin.t about Tavares being attacked by rattlesnakes and the fcple had to turn out with guns and rocks and thnishpoles and they killed over 410 in t e s'reets one Sunday morning and in two days had killed ov, r a thousand and the people wero tenor-stricken. The article went into many details and told about a woman win put her infant child in a tub while she washing in an-oth- r tub, an t a big rattler got his head over the edge of the tub and i-he had to kill him with her battling stick. I asked a Tavares man about it and he was am;iz?d. ''Why," saip he, ''it is a lie a lie without any founda tion. Some lying repor er made it up for a sensa'ion." And not long after I read that there was yellow lever in Tampa and the peo ple were fl.ing from the city. I was in Tampa i hat very day and knew it was a lie. Of cou se the paper took it all b:itk the next day and i-a'd it was a mis'ake, but there is no telling the dami,e that such mistakes do. If a re porter who is running around for news gets np a li ; for a sensation he should be turned off in Btanter. An l hem is the silver question that has been the sul ject of more exaggeration than will ever be forgiven in tho day of judgment moro crimination and slaneler and suppression of tho truth, and roth ng is yet settled about it. Who knows what is best? When we eeo such statesmen as Morgan and Vest and Harris and Daniel and George and Blickburu and Crisp and Pdack and McLanrin and a host of 0 h. ri on erne s de, and as many notable men on the other side, what right has a common man to jump up and swear that he knows all alx yt it and that those who don't think wilii 1 ini are fools. But I r ckon the next election will settle it, and I wish it was over, for the P"Oj)le arc getting mighty tired of the whole biuinesH. And there is another question that comes up i!iodicDlly and has recently come up again. )oe education lessen crime? Some philan thropists are. getting concerned about this, and well they may, for the statistics of every state in the Union establish the fact that education of the kind the pupils are getting increases crime not a little, but immensely, and yet wa go on ind on with it and the clamor comes for mor e ami more. Just look over the daily pa pers and see how the reoord of crime is in- .reaslng not misdemeanors, bnt the mst aw nl crimes not only awav off in Ohio, bnt ight here in Georgia. But I forbear. I wrote his all up two years ago and gave the figures rom the approved repor s of the penitentiary md tho prisons and the jiils and the work l iiies from Massnchu-'ett to Texas, and they Rren. all alike, so far as increase was concerned. Ilalent we better tdop and think about this md ake a les oil from Prussia as to the kind of education that will diminish crime? AVho di.dl the good and virtuous girls marry nowa layh? Where are the young men who a'e vorthy of them? Ihere sre at least forty young mania cable girls in this town of good fami hei who woild make pool wivis, but where aio the yonii2 men to whom i lie fath'rs wonld entrust them? There are not ten a e th're tivi? Muriage U at a eli-count not because this? pills are fast or ex'ravagmt or ride a l i cj( I, l ut because the ye nng men are generally no ac.onnt. or dissipattd or can't support a w.fc. Some of tlitm w.ll spree all nightlong md go to a dauco the next night with a re s ceta'.le girl. How many young married women have snpo-at-d from thesr husbands or ben divorcd or ibv-dentd? Aliont thtt bicre'e craz, as it is called. I enn'e that I cannot see anything roni or immodest at nt it w!ien the dress i mod ut. U all depends upon that. I saw two young irls in Tampa r de up the stiect nd a'l'ght st l-c p-ist Pice and set their mail and mount g a.' d i d; away and nobody th u lit it ony In . wrong r immodes-. 1 am iir it v r ( ( ii ie.l to nic. and I w.-s obh e I to : d .i : tbeni and tli - tr:c- of the r ev iut (on--. I !" i"t ihu.k tl a' i.i irr c I .. en, wh.. r- s t el a- thiys y. ior v ry b.r e 2;0-j'oii't'rr, ' "ill I li lo t in. Tim re i rt ra nr ibmgs that joting grbi may d Ih t tl.eii mo'hrs sloill i o'. As to the (Inn we are all the cr atim-i if pri judice. and Mi. tostcme of the country livt- in has much to d wiib our i reindict. Ii I'aly and Swtz-ila-d anl Andalesu Hi? j t row-. np maidens all dress in slir: skirts that ihowthe ankle and a pret'v crofs-lact-l Ii'me ' ! hove it, and i. is all right" over th-ie. I've ! t-en th pictnrei cf these pretty maidens aid I ke iher c-e-stum'-. but it w nld be shocking; iver here. I wjU make another confe mon. j I can see no pood reason savj t nstom whv j .-dies hould ii t ride a hor c like ai un if they rido at 1 1'. It is c r ; uny the safer war. I ran' fee any j wl rcabn why a onn eh' ni l tio : i rict ce nitdcinj anion; ber ou ex. ! la fact, Ith nk tt.cy shmi'd bavj th pref r- ! ncc, an 1 i' koni cn'errr sing wj-.n .u s!i n' I j fstablish a female medical college it would t ' J-be rally patronizt-d. The time is near at hand when tie women will hare to run the machine i it it will not be done. The time is past for I'-nflrung womn to the fireside when th-re i ' V -npptTt for them there. Paul pok fcr Lis I wo time and its cutoma not for ours when ' "4 ' hat long hair wn the glory of woman. I ' was worn long, tut now it is d one op and se- ! lird wi-h hirpin. Who eTer saw a painting ! If Lve or of Mary Magdalene or any Jtwi-h j on:n of that day with her La.T don- op in a a i ( h the Lack of her l if,. i i " I'M have wire.l the SiT ,.r'i f.i -,.i. v.,.. i I ir if If bad U-n a twitch vr was don-o up nh pin. Taul m douU was foscinaud wi h iu.il ire-se-a a we all are. Even t-ome of rir rotable meu admired Ion Lair much h . r ; . . 1. - wore weir own fca:rdon oj n !Ler .wuijcr... JOi rnilenrr i.n.rr.tm ....1 T r , : C. Lamar wore their very long, and to dot . , . 1 u.. r- v.tVyvmA mrtA Wrurer A. PrTOT. and I lon't strppose there Is any harm in it. even fhongh they were not Nazsrenes. A great man ran afford to do it. for it does give him a 'Ju piter tonans" appearance. "Hehakes hia tm Irosial locks and gives the nod." As to women talking in church, I Lope they will not make a business of it, and we ecu J lay theBsme of seme men we know. But ll she talks well and makes tha world Let'er. let In r tal. f be teiches oar children in ih pnt lic schools an 1 Babbath tchools and why n t in the church? The fact is, if woman was allow ed to toe onr lawmaker fcr ono scsm-t iron'd wale up the Da'ion on the whisky tat n . wouldn't le? Then let her make prog ress in everv good w, rk. We know vety c:I hat it is her nutnral desire to marry and bo a n .rlxr but if thtr is ro proret f th.-t. w: at runs' she do? Go to the misstonaiy m cj vir vwit the sick, vou may fay. Thai von I. .y I teid nor clo bing. I he.rd a fTtnc far, "Would you make amaions cf our rnm.r Th wens no Amazons, and Ama- WIU4 stricken from the modern mips, for neither the country nor the women could i. i UnmhnMt mvs he searched dih- Centlv an 1 found an old.hian over there who d jg prandfather told him he saw four in iimtonr women astride of horses and arra-d with soeirs, but he says from hia best informa tion th se were a few dusky slave women who scaped from thoir captors and fl-d far into the interior and built a fort to protect them selres, and tt ere, in course of time, they all died. This amazon storr is all a myth, but if u was not, it does not follow that our men will ever iet i-o low as to let the women do the Hghting. And now there is a big controversy about ti e old woman who killed her husband 'o, I wouldent hang her. It was an awful ( rime f. r a woman to do, but I wouldent hang . nv woman. But look how many men have killed their wives or sweethearts in the last s x months. It is getting as common ai suicides. What is the matter with the country and bo w 1 protect the girls when we are g .ue? Bill A nr. in Atlanta Constitution- THE MARKETS. NEW TOKK Cotton firm, middling gulf, Sales 71.900 bales. COTTOX rCTCRES. Middling uplands 7; 1. Futures steady. August 6 94'15 September. ..6 VlfoM October 7 01Ci02 November. . .7 OS'iOtj December... January. . .. February . . . March .7 10(511 .7 15fa16 .7 20621 .7 252G LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Middling313-1 Sales 8,000. Futures quiet. Jan. A Feb... 3 01 Aug. h Sept. .3 44fif 45 Feb.&March.3 52(5-53 Sept. A Oct. .3 46 Meb.AApril..3 5:b54 Oct. A Nov.. ..3 4743 Apr. A May. .3 55 Nov. A Dec. .3 4Sr? 49 August 3 44(3)45 Dec. A Jan. ..3 49'n 0 CHICAGO GRAIN AND PRODUCE. WHEAT Aug CORN Aug OATS Aug Kibe Sept. LARD Sept. 67, Sept... . G7j; 41 . .10 32.; . C 07J i . 5 yo iYa 22 9 65 6 12 5 92 U Sept... Sept. . . Jan... . Oct.... Oct.... bils Sept . HOME COTTON MARKETS. Ral- eiiar- C"!- Char eich. ltte. umliia. le-ton. Good middling. ..7V 7.40 VA 6 1-16 Strict middling 1yi Middling 1)k Strict low middling 5s Low middling 6f Tinges 6,' Clean siains 6 7.25 iyfi 6?f 7.15 6ft 6' C.05 Gi C,4' C.95 6 5-16 6 5-16 5 Deep stains and blues. 5 SEA ISLAND COTTON. Medium fine slightly ofT color, 17al8; rae 'dium lino 22a24; line 2 ta2; extra fine 30a35. BALTIMORE PRODCCE MARKET. Flocb Quiet, Western super 2 G0fa 2 85; do extra 2 903 30; do family 3 45(5 3 75; winter wheat patents 3 85rf?4 00; spring wheat pat ents 3 85(5 4 15 i Wheat Weak. No. 2 red spot and Aug. 65 5-Sf-69?; September 69 5-8(569 7-8. (steamer No. 2 red 65 1-2(565 3-4 South lerubv sample, 705.7 1; do on grade 6770. 1 Corn Weak. Mixed spot and August 47; September .47? asked; steamer mixed ; Southern white 4950; do yellow 4951 naval stores. Wilmington. N. C Rosin firm, strained, I 20; good strained, 1 25; Spirits turpen tine quiet, machine, 25; irregulars, 24 J. Tar llrm at 1.35; crude turpentine steady; hard. 1.20; soft. 1.60; virgin, 2.00. New York Kosin dull and easy, strained, common to good 1.52.25S1.57). Turpentine quiet and easy at 27(5 27 ' Charleston Turpentine firm at 21 1-2. Rosin, good strained firm at l.lO'S l.lS Cotton Seed Oil. New York Cotton et d oil, quiet and steady; crude 24(525; yel Jo v prime 28 5 28'; d o good off grade 27; 27 . RICE. The rice market was quiet at Charleston. The quotations are: Trime 5 a5,'; Good 4 a 4j.;; Fair 3.Va3?4'; Common 2a3. KRTITS Ar.D VEGETABLES. Lemons, S0's, per box 4.00. Raisins.loose per box 1.75; cluster, per box 2.00. Mixed nuts, per pound 10.'. Egyptian onions, per bar 2.50'. Virginia peanuts, hand-picked, per pound Jol'; North Carolina peanuts, haud-pi-'ked. per bushel 1.25. White beans, per bushel 2.50. rnrNTRY iRonrcE. Country Butter Choice Tennessee) lBa25e, m dium 123j to 15c. Cow Peas 5e and 70 per bushel. Poultry Grown fowls, choice to 3.25 p r dozen. Chickens 2.25:i2.75 per dozen, ac or ling to size and quality. Ducks M i.seovy 4a4.50.. Geese, young 4.50 per dozen. Eggs Eggs 9 to 103 per dozen. Wool Washed 15c per pound; unwashed II 1. Hides lie to 12 '. Wax 25e to 27c. LIMK, CEMENT AND TLASTER. Alabama and Tennessee lump lini" fioc; E i-tern Ro' kport, Maine, lime 1.25; car-lots, 1.10. tVnient Rosenthal 1.40 to 1.65; car b.ts 1.25. New York plaster Taris 2.00. L iths 1.50 to 2.00 per M. Portland cement B dgium 2.40 to 2.75. Eiiglish Portland 2.50 t. i 00; B dgium, carlots 2.00; English e-ar-I its 2.25. TIMBER AND LTMBLB. Merchantable 11.00 to 16.00 for city sawed; 12.00 to 14.00 for railroad; square and sound, e.oo to 13.00 for railroad, 8.00 to 11.00 for nft. D."k timber 4.50 to 6.50; shipping 8.50 to 10.50. Shingles 5.00 to 7.00. PHOSPHATE ROCK. Crude 2.75, delivered at works; hot air dried 3.25, free on board; ground rock 5.00, i.i Lnllr 0 Tlie Family Market liasket. Trices of meat, fruit, fish and vetetables have changed but little since last week. In the Charhrton market prices were as follows bu Saturday: Pears lo to 35 cents a dozen, Pca dies 25 cents a (Tate aud from that up tT 40 cents a doz-n. Niagara graf.es 15 to 2i cents a basket. Apples 5 to 25cents a dozen, 50 cents a crate. California orange 25 to 60 cents a dozen. California jars 30 to 60 cents a dozen. California apricots 15 to 20 cents a dozen. LmoD3 15 to 25 cents a .dozn. Pineapples 10 to 20 cents a piece. lC;ilifornia plums 15 to 35 ents a dozen. Huckleberries 5 cents a quart. Nectarines 15 and 20 cents a dozen. Japan plums 25 cents a dozen. Cantaloupes 5 to 10 cnt3 an-l watermelons range from 5 to 25 ( cts each. Okraand tomato 15 to 20 cents a bushel. In the market and on the street, however, tomatoes are 2 to 3 cents a quart and ok ral to 2 cetts. CHerv 10 cents a stalk. Cucumbers 10 cents a dozen. 1U ft entsa bunch. Squashes 10 cents a dozen. mnng ioo,ins iu cent3 a quart. Carrots 5 ! lfnt3a bu""h- Turnips 5 cents a bnn. h. Onions 5 cents a bunch. Corn 20 cents a dozen ears. Bell peppers 5 cents a quart Egg plant 2 to 5 cents each. Soup benchej 5 cents. Iri.-h potatoes 3o ?en'..s a p- k. Sweet pctatoes25 cents. , Red snapper and other large fl.h for jn to 12X cents pr pound. P.la'k fish 20 aTstring. Whiting 20 to 25 cents a stnn? fiheephead 25 cents and upward a string Porgies 15 to 25 ynts a string. Grouper 9 cents a pound. Shrimp 10 cent a p ih Torter house fteak 15 cents a pound ' sir loin 15 cents and round 15 ceuu Rtb roast 12 cents. Lambl5cent. Spring chickens 1 1.50 to S3 H.n mwufoiu a aozen. tggj 10 to cents a dozen. TIIK INDIAN THQi nLKS OVER. Gen. Copplnger levrilic-s the Situa tion In the llannock Country. Gen. Coppir.ger. in a trlegra-n to any headquarter at Wa-hingtoa. thus decribes the situation in the Bannock U.ilita C0lritry: "All is q-;iet at Jackson'd Hole. The fcouting jrues were ft ot yesterday one tiithi..-..ii.o , ., . ' i . ,. , . . :i -Ji'o ana oq .ioui Il.iliack Uiver One cf.m:r.i- . i; Ws rdere.1 to S wan Valtev f. r iba r tectioii ..f . nir.ru. Theactif,- arent at thf - rt Hall reservation report- that 144 In. dian were earni-.! four miU Mwt r i c,i- Springs an 1 Potm 200 at the outlet of Gray'a like, H.i cbuming to be on their way to their a,J claiming to vt on their waj'to their re.-iiive ;--.-i-r -in e rt-er varion Th irri.u ver ,. - - cniU TYEATHSB-CROP DTJLIiETrjf I,aued lythe NortH CroUn. fit.t -Teather Serrice. The reports of correspondents of the WeeUr Weather Crop Bxilletxn, issaed the7 North Carolina State Weather Service for the V" Jee' "teX ally favorable. The first of the week waa above the normal in temperature, generally cloudy, "rith rain on five days; the latter part was too cool, but cl6&r Eastekn Di3Ticr. A few .e rondents report excessive rain fall, uhile a few otbera report it too dry. The rain was mostly in the form ol local fhowers. The temperature has been favorable, though the last two days were a little cooler than normal. Cotton is generally reported to be doing well, but still small; the pros tect for cotton has improved very much during past few weeks. Tobacco growers in this district Lave had hne success in curing during tho week, c ..t otnt.ors ore beins marketeel. , nn.rlir The corn crop will be good nearly everywhere in this portion! the btate. reaches ate now plentiiui, qualitv of the fruit is generally pior. Watcnnelons, on tho whole, are rather -(. r at this tuee. Ccntra r. I ) iV.tr" c r . Oats in shock were wa.shed nway aud corn injured. 'J lie dnmnge, how'ever, extended only over 'united arens in live comities; elsewhero the ruins were beneficial. Tobacco doing well; most of it is top pod. Early corn is practically made. Cotton whs unfavorably affected by too much ruin and subsequent cool weath er, ami some shedding of square is ro ported. Wheat land being broken. Threshing wheat ftill in progress, (lathering grapes Ins begun in south ern portion. Westckn District. So far there h is been les rain in this district than elsewhere, but during tho past week liio showers have fallen almost every -win re. greatly benefitting ciops. It is still dry in .Mecklenburg couuty and vicinity. At a few places the rain-fall wis heavy and washed lands, badly on eiitk bottoms but the damage was small. The first of the week was w arm, bitter part a little c ol, but, clear. As a general tiling prospects for good crops continue line. Corn unusually good, and the large crop planted in btires a big yield. Corn is all laid by even in the west, anil early corn is safe. Cotton is doing pretty well. Fanners are commencing to break wheat Un l. Some turnips have been sown. O.its are about all stacked. Wheat is still being threshed, with di versi tied reports as to quality. Irish potatoes are being dug andaru turning out bi iter than expected. Fruit, cs peeinjiv apples, in great abundance, much of it wasting. Water-mtlom ripe in the cojintry, A Ueiuariiablc reinucp. At Hum?, the other day, au enorm r.ns ?rovd assembled in the square of .Sr. Peter's to watch two womeD, dretsed in black, who crept across the square to the church doors on their kuecs brushing the ground with small brushes and repeatedly kissing the stones they had cleaned. New York In Spain more hands are employed in tho cotton in lust ry thin any other save agriculture. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report It would take sound fourteen years to travel from tha sun to the earth. Paper is being used as an insulating agent for three main telephone wires that are being laid in Nottingham, England. The ptarmigan of tho Arctic regions resembles the prairie chicken in size and habits, and ia their summer plu mage are almost identical in color. Skinny Sufferer Saved. Tobacco users as a rule are away? below normal weight because tobacco destroys di gestion and causes nerve irritation that aps brain ower and vitality. You can get a quick, guaranteed relief "by the uso of No-fo-Eac. aid then if yrm don't like your free dom and improved physical condition you can crn the use of tr-haceo over again jut like the hr-d tiioe. No-To-Dac sold under guarantee to cute by Druggists everywhere. Uook free. Ad. Sterling ltemedy Co New York City or Chicago. ' Rev. II. I Carsoi. Scotland, Iak.. says: 1 wo b UlMof II ill's Catarrh Care complete ly cure i 111 little ifirl." HtUl by Uraifyist',"'. The More One I e I'arker'a ;tcer Taalc the more ita virtues nre revealed in dUpelling colds, indiget-tifoi, iiti nnd every weaknesa. The We.-dorn railroad in order to bo abl to transact all of tho-ir business have lef.n Obliged to increase their torw of emf.loves. GREAT BOOK FREE. When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. Y published the fir-t edition of his work, The l eoplc-'s Common Scne Medical Adviser, he announced that after 6S0.000 copies had been sold at the tegular price, f i.yj per copy, the profit on which would repay him fur the great amount cf labor and money expended iu prducing it. be would dis tribute the next half million free. Aslhis number of copies has alieady been sold, be is now di'-tributintr absnlufrfv frr pletc, interest- f C -"i"c " mi most com- COUPON lineandval- liable common No. 113 I sens; med- i .1.cl,l ical work ever the recipient only being required to mail to him, at the above address, this little COVION with twenty-one (21) cents in one cent stamps to pay for postage and pack ing only, and the book w.ll be sent by mail. It is a veritable medical library, complete in oae volume. It contains over inno pages and more than jpo illustrations. The J-ree Edition is precisely the umr as thoe sold at f 1 y except only that the books are bound in strong manilla paper covers in stead of clothe Send now before all are givtn away. They arc going off rapidly. f fertilizers should contain a hic-h -- insure the largest yield 01 me sou. Write for our ' Farmers' Guide," a 142-page illustrated boolc. It is brim full cf useful information for farmers. It will Le sent fice. nd will make and save you money. Address. r.nuiu rill tm-n tr Ctt Vw Yok- OCLaV0QN0CiU 0H0E WRECKED, BBOEEM IH HEALTH. Now H Cm Baa and Jump "Equal to Sixteen-year-old Boy" The ETeet of Six Boxes of Fink PllU. From Vie Messenger, Wilmington, j- c. The following letter from George Eueii a citizen of Lattrlnburg, N. a, wUl prorq 0f Interest to many ot our readers who may b suffering from that dreaded disease-, tnatlsm. Ia.uinrB-BO, N. C, April 3, 1835. Dr. Williams Medicine Company, S:ha. ectady, N. Y. Gentlemen: During the summer of l-?s I had a severe attack ot typhoid fever waic'a left my constitution In a wrecked .ia I broVaj.. down condition. Ever afterwar U I hilto be very careful not to get the leat dnisp for if I did an attack of rheumatism would Uthi result. I was able, however, to n't-nl t business the most of my time though I ?oul i never say that I wa well. I contin ivl way till tho summer ot 1S?1 wh"n I wv takou with a moro severe attack of rhumv lism wnicn eoaiiuucc.i nti iu in' i-aV .-.f ' niy tieal ana necic, men rny t-ti-onucr . , invo,VtM, , g'airiW, untl,,, n.T j ,.1,1 not re-t day or night, could g -t m n.', position that would give me rest even f,r few moments, could not sleep m-T thnnli minutes at any ono time, had no aw-tit, mT flesh was reduced till 1 weigh"! uly V. The dlsense moved down or rather spt.- 1 the small of the back and into t.-th hij;. tha to the left kueo joint. I could nt walk m, Iho door steps, but had to crawl mt an jnt!v tlie'honse. Atut this time I was Uk-ii wih a shnrtness of breath which one i -t r j.r,w ioiincd heart drojisy. another an ex -.- ( water in the chest. I gave up all h '..-o( ever getting any btter or even living f.,r more than a few months. I wr-t mwv ( my ndatlons that I did not exjct t liv"l,:,t .1 very short tini. Of coursj 1 h.i i len un.r the care nf nun who called thenielvis g.oj doctors all this titue; I had six of tlc m to at tend me during my sickness. I tried .VHry. thing that I could get that was said t. t-n-ilt peoplo who had rheunntisin. but in.-tca l .f getting relief I continued to grow w.r. One day a friend came to vntt m, an I hi;., nil othr frieuis, had a remedy f.r mv ills. Her rvmedy was Dr. Williams' Pink PilU f,,r 1'nb r(.opl. Bho shrwd me a paper w hi -'. praised them very highly. I told hcrth.it I bad no faith in them, nud as for the nrti-1 -in tho iaper, it was nothing but nvr bosh. IJut liko a drowning man th u wii! citch at a straw I concluded to try th" ,ti! I commenced to get better from th Itr-t d:iv! I took six Noses and am well, mv n. tit w good, 1 sleep well, have gained in tbr-li (run 121 His. to lfiO lts. I have leen in th-rim till I w:m literally drenched without . jK'rienciiig any annoyance afterward-!. I can run, jump, hop and skip epial to a six-t(en-yer-old loy. Any ono doubting this statement . v n Rtistied by writing me. Yours trulv. OKORftE KUSSKI I,. Mr. Ooorgo Kussell has this day ;i..";ir-.l (ii erson leforo me, a Justice of the p..;l..,, for lltchmond County, N. C. and mad-. i!h that the statement contained in this nnim script is true in every particular. Sw i:i ;.( before, me this 13th day of April, ls.i.'i. M. K. Jo.Nr'S, J. V. Dr. Williams' Pink Tills euro all iorm-..f weakness arising from a watery conditi tho Idood or shattered nerves, two fruitful causes if almost every ill that llesh i. tcir t .. Thes pills are also a BpeeiJle forth truuM-i peculiar to f etn tUcgioteid sui res.'-io:i-, ,: foriDM, Of W'-'' " u"""" f"OUMi.aM or,. bearing dov t he va-- f kmni wtiJJ jr 11 llllllieill n-nvni ."..- tal W0-T3L jaf wti i v -r nature. "V ) ' ' S Dr. Williams Tinlt rilfscontnin all the .1. . ments iiccessary to givo new life and n -ii-nss to the biood, nnl restore sli itt-r--1 nerves. They are manufactured bv thlr. William' Medicino Co., fSchencctad v. N. V , and are sold only in loxs tiearing tic ' i i. i trade-mark and wrar ier nl 0 cent- a t-.-v.cr six boxes for $2.5 , tin 1 an never bulk or by tho dozen or hundni I. 1 1.1 Within four months 150,000 Alal'im tjorkingmen have bad their wagcM inci:i- I from tento fifteen per cent. Argon and helium have been ex tracted together from a meteorite, ij Professor Ramsey and M. IJrthtlot, which points to the exitence of argoa outside of this earth. Professor Hod kinson has found gasew, which he believes to be tho two now element", in minerals of tho samarskite aa 1 cu cnite group. Wife tiRed "MoTlir.h's F iokvo" beforj flr-t child-wasquickly relicv d;siitl. r.-l t": h' ; recovery rapid. L. K. Johnston, Kur ci' i. Alo. Pare find Uliolrnome Onnlltr rommend-? to public npproval.lhe t 'n!:f'rn: liquid laxative remedy. Syrup of Kigt. It ! pleasnnt to the taste an! bysicting c.!,t!yoi the kidney, liver and boweV toi lea: -' !." ' tern effeitaally, it promotr-t tt:n li' il'h ar 1 comfort of all who use it. nd with nnili'-u, it s the best and only remedy. .I(IIN0 t HIM, tM I KVKItTOM' t'.itl fx, frl renti m lv.U If It rnf ""i n1 not nine ) eini onlito it 1'm-. lbt dnt i cir lit. l'Si!lnMP'"f. Jtfi. Ilin'n. F'"-iw. ?r l. 'I TPU MI K . ill. It.. u-..T'llIO Kt. (ill li.-.irjo leter. ! ea. "ti N-nr'ni. Hi- I. in 5. . . Monff ba-k tf ni t.itl fa. a Ak r"" " h. A. B- OIB4Ulik.r. Kann'i, I.i . V:-V ' voir Till- TJfc3 TO TETTERINE 0 11. Tha omt ta.ri!- and t- (Tr f " III- m 'TV " '' T.tr. U r.f "m.m-t el i.n lSi f. til-'- (ir .un'1 il-h. !;-.', . : lr I'.i. n I m " I" ll th-wt AIL H'!l w-'1 . II tr..a r M Niant-b, dr. St: V r CU . ' 11 f 1 ' tj- 1. n't k-rp u. rRACIICAL 'lu-'-' .' C0L1G, Jiiciuaaad, Va. E. EicLmand. Va. ". r- r- r- I'r.Hrvj- rii"i r;-T NiT Falls to VCTro't. Hair 10 I'a i""1"'",;. jj. w. and 1 1 - "- ' ' " s. x. v. .12. A for Fall Crops nercentno-e nf Potnsh to a e and a permanent enrichment q PARSER'S J HAIR BALSAp n'lun and W! -"i
Marion Record (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 8, 1895, edition 1
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